4

I found out that on my system "error_reporting" was turned off. So I turned it on (E_ALL) and now I have quite a lot errors.

if you're interested in my mistakes:

Notice: Undefined index: page in …path/file.php on line 22
Notice: Undefined offset: 1 in …path/file.php on line 49
Notice: Undefined offset: 2 in …path/file.php on line 57
Notice: Undefined offset: 3 in …path/file.php on line 58
Notice: Undefined variable: out in …path/file.php on line 85
Notice: Undefined variable: out in …path/file.php on line 109
Notice: Use of undefined constant M_DESCRIPTION - assumed 'M_DESCRIPTION' in …path/file.php on line 181
Notice: Use of undefined constant GA_TRACKER - assumed 'GA_TRACKER' in …path/file.php on line 291
Notice: A session had already been started - ignoring session_start() in …path/file.php on line 12
Notice: Undefined variable: attributes in …path/file.php on line 86
Notice: Undefined variable: li in …path/file.php on line 129
Notice: Undefined index: breakafterlabel in …path/file.php on line 175
Notice: Undefined index: afterlabel in …path/file.php on line 167
Notice: Undefined index: attributes in …path/file.php on line 188
Notice: Undefined index: value in …path/file.php on line 191
Notice: Undefined index: for in …path/file.php on line 163
Notice: Undefined index: attributes in …path/file.php on line 249
Notice: Undefined index: value in …path/file.php on line 299
Notice: Undefined variable: out in …path/file.php on line 109
Notice: Undefined offset: 0 in …path/file.php on line 418
Notice: Undefined index: maxlength in …path/file.php on line 368
Notice: Undefined index: accept in …path/file.php on line 372
Notice: Undefined variable: out in …path/file.php on line 93
Notice: Undefined index: accept in …path/file.php on line 378
Notice: Undefined index: title in …path/file.php on line 379
Notice: Undefined index: accept in …path/file.php on line 402
Notice: Undefined index: fp in …path/file.php on line 624
Notice: Undefined variable: alert_msg in …path/file.php on line 246
Notice: Undefined variable: returner in …path/file.php on line 87
Notice: Undefined index: body in …path/file.php on line 309
Notice: Undefined variable: out in …path/file.php on line 81
Notice: Undefined variable: defaults in …path/file.php on line 121

First I thought "Oh you better turn it off again", but I'm not sure about the consequences!

So the very simple question is: Does it matter if I ignore all the errors or not?

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  • 11
    You should fix them Jan 18, 2013 at 10:25
  • 2
    @JohnDoeSmith "Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong."
    – Leri
    Jan 18, 2013 at 10:28
  • 3
    These are just Notices. Notices appear, when ever you do something that "works", but is not how it should be. i.e. if you are doing $myAarray[] = 1 without doing $myArray = array() prior, you'll get a Notice about an undefined variable $myArray, for the first access. It's not critical, it just is uncomplete/dirty code. Consequences of not resolving it? You produce a lot of log-entrys and overview while searching real errors will suffer.
    – dognose
    Jan 18, 2013 at 10:29
  • 1
    using isset could fix most of those errors.
    – andy
    Jan 18, 2013 at 10:32
  • 1
    @dognose Not only annoying and causing a huge log file: Notices are good hints, were you maybe have a bug. They are not critical from the interpreter point-of-view, but maybe from the applications ;)
    – KingCrunch
    Jan 18, 2013 at 10:40

4 Answers 4

5

In a development environment it's best to work with error_reporting(E_ALL), so you can see notices as well. This encourages you to have a higher coding standard.

When running a live site, you MUST have display_errors off, but log your errors (just like you're doing).

This way, you will only see errors that have meaning, and not only "Notice: Undefined ...". If the website is already done, you should spend a bit of time refactoring your code, the long-term benefits will be worth it.

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  • 1
    In production environment I prefer error_reporting(E_ALL), display_errors = Off, log_errors = On and error_log = /some/file/errors.log Jan 18, 2013 at 12:33
3

If you just want to hide temporarily some message errors, use an @ :

echo @$undefined;
@session_start;

This will not solve your error, but make your error listing clearer while you are fixing it.

1

The answer is: no! Ignoring errors might cause unexpected behaviors. In addition it may slow down the execution of your program / script. So you better not ignoring but fix them.

Do be more detailed: Where the Undefined offset errors are unproblematic in most cases, a Use of undefined constant constant or a failed session_start may be dangerous.

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  • 1
    If you log them you may run into issues like that: 2bits.com Where they say "Moral of the story: don't have php-errors and notices in the first place."
    – mosch
    Jan 18, 2013 at 10:32
-1

You should pay attention to the errors and warnings. They are you saying that you have done something wrong in .

The errors are very useful in a a development environment. But when you release the code, it's best to disable them.

0

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